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9-letter words containing f, e, r, o, t

  • fortified — to protect or strengthen against attack; surround or provide with defensive military works.
  • fortifier — to protect or strengthen against attack; surround or provide with defensive military works.
  • fortifies — to protect or strengthen against attack; surround or provide with defensive military works.
  • fortilage — (obsolete) A little fort; a blockhouse.
  • fortitude — mental and emotional strength in facing difficulty, adversity, danger, or temptation courageously: Never once did her fortitude waver during that long illness.
  • fortunate — having good fortune; receiving good from uncertain or unexpected sources; lucky: a fortunate young actor who got the lead in the play.
  • fortunize — to make happy or fortunate
  • forty-one — a cardinal number, 40 plus 1.
  • foscarnet — a drug used to treat herpes viruses
  • fosterage — the act of fostering or rearing another's child as one's own.
  • fostering — Encourage or promote the development of (something, typically something regarded as good).
  • fourteens — Plural form of fourteen.
  • freak out — any abnormal phenomenon or product or unusual object; anomaly; aberration.
  • freak-out — an act or instance of freaking out.
  • free port — a port or special section of a port where goods may be unloaded, stored, and shipped without payment of customs duties.
  • free vote — law: not based on political party
  • freebooty — plunder; loot; spoils.
  • freestone — a fruit having a stone to which the flesh does not cling, as certain peaches and plums.
  • freezeout — a game in which each player begins with a predetermined amount of money and must withdraw from the game once that amount is lost, until one player is left with all the winnings.
  • frenotomy — The surgical cutting of the frenum.
  • fresh out — newly short of sth
  • fretboard — a fingerboard with frets, as on a guitar.
  • frivolent — (nonstandard) frivolous, trifling, silly.
  • fromentin — Eugene [œ-zhen] /œˈʒɛn/ (Show IPA), 1820–76, French painter, critic, and author.
  • front end — 1. An intermediary computer that does set-up and filtering for another (usually more powerful but less friendly) machine (a "back end"). 2. Software that provides an interface to another program "behind" it, which may not be as user-friendly. Probably from analogy with hardware front-ends that interfaced with mainframes.
  • front-end — relating to foremost part
  • frontager — an owner of property or land which immediately faces a beach or street
  • frontages — Plural form of frontage.
  • frontenac — Comte de (kɔ̃t də). title of Louis de Buade. 1620–98, governor of New France (1672–82; 1689–98)
  • frontenis — a Latin American game, resembling squash, played with rackets and a hard rubber ball on a three-walled court similar to a jai alai court.
  • frontiers — Plural form of frontier.
  • frontless — shameless; unblushing.
  • frontlets — Plural form of frontlet.
  • frontline — front (def 9).
  • frontpage — Alternative spelling of front page.
  • frontside — Denoting a maneuver in surfing and other board sports that is done counterclockwise for a regular rider and clockwise for a goofy rider.
  • frontwise — Toward the front; in the direction of the front; frontward.
  • frostbelt — Snowbelt.
  • frostbite — injury to any part of the body after excessive exposure to extreme cold, sometimes progressing from initial redness and tingling to gangrene.
  • frostless — with no frost
  • frostline — the maximum depth at which soil is frozen.
  • frostweed — a plant, Helianthemum canadense, of the rockrose family, native to eastern North America, having narrow leaves and a solitary yellow flower.
  • frothless — without froth
  • fruticose — having the form of a shrub; shrublike.
  • fullerton — a city in SW California, SE of Los Angeles.
  • godfather — a novel (1969) by Mario Puzo.
  • heatproof — not affected or damaged by heat, especially when placed in an oven or over a direct flame: heatproof cookware.
  • homecraft — skills used in the home
  • homefront — Alternative form of home front.
  • horsefoot — (botany) The coltsfoot.
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